Monday, January 03, 2005

Pfizer Corporation, In Re - Ruling of Authority for Advance Rulings (Income-tax), India

     An Advance Ruling was handed down on October 4, 2004 by the Authority for Advance Rulings in the case of   Pfizer Corporation, Panama   (in AAR No 620 of 2003), the particulars of which are as follows.

Facts
2. Pfizer Corporation, a company incorporated in — and a tax resident of — Panama, was the owner of technical know-how for the manufacture of nutritional food supplement products which were manufactured and sold in India by Pfizer India, a group company, under the "Protinex" and "Dumex" trademarks (both trademarks having been registerd in India). Pfizer India had been using the technical know-how for the manufacture of the aforesaid products free of any royalty, under an arrangement entered into with Pfizer Panama.

3. In November 2003, the technical know-how (inter alia) was sold by Pfizer Panama to EAC Nutrition Limited, Denmark, for US$ 5 million. (Under a separate agreement entered into between EAC Denmark and Pfizer India, the licence granted to Pfizer India by Pfizer Panama was terminated prematurely in consideration of payment by EAC Denmark to Pfizer India of a sum of US$ 7 million). In terms of the agreement entered into between Pfizer Panama and EAC Denmark, the technical know-how was handed over, in Bangkok, Thailand, by Pfizer India to EAC Denmark, in the form of a dossier. While making payment to Pfizer Panama, of the consideration of US$ 5 million, EAC Denmark had withheld therefrom, tax at the rate of 21%, which amount EAC Denmark had deposited with the Government of India.

Issue(s)
4. Pfizer Panama, feeling aggrieved by the withholding of tax by EAC Denmark, applied to the Authority for a ruling on the following question :
"
Whether the receipt by the applicant, a company incorporated in and the tax resident of Panama, from the transfer of documents containing know-how and technical information, outside India, to EAC Nutrition Ltd. A/S, a corporation incorporated under the laws of Denmark, under th Sale and Purchase of Technology Agreement dated November 30, 2002 would be taxable in India having regard to the provisions of the Income-tax Act, 1961 ?



Determinations Culminating in Advance Ruling
5. In arriving at its ruling, the Authority made the following determinations :
(i) Since there is no Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement between India and Panama, the taxability of the transaction has to be considered only under the domestic law of India. Further, since the transfer of a capital asset situated outside India does not attract any tax liability under the domestic law, the questions for consideration are :

(a) What is the nature of the property which is the subject-matter (viz., the technical know-how in the form of a dossier) of the transfer and

(b) if such subject-matter is a capital asset, what was its situs at the time of its transfer.

(ii) The answers to the two questions at (i) above were as follows :

(a) It was undisputed that the technical know-how was -

(I) owned by Pfizer Panama,

(II) used for a very long time in India, almost exclusively and, therefore,

(III) "..... available in India, both in the form of a dossier as well as in intangible form.".
(emphasis supplied).

Accordingly, having regard to the judgments of the Supreme Court in Scientific Engg House (P) Ltd v CIT [1986] 157 ITR 86 (SC) and Associated Cement Cos Ltd v Commissioner of Customs [2001] (42)RLT 937, the technical know-how in the form of a dossier was a capital asset and the transfer of such technical-know-how "was transfer of a capital asset.".

(b) Once Pfizer India entered into the agreement aforesaid wih EAC Denmark, "..... the technical know-how reverted back to the owner and there was extinguishment of right to manufacture for which consideration has been paid to the Indian company. As a result no asset related to technical know-how was located in India either in tangible or intangible form after termination of the licence granted to Indian company. The subsequent agreements between EAC Trading Private Limited, an Indian affiliate of EAC Denmark and Pfizer India to have business support during the initial period of EAC Trading's operations in India do not affect the situs of asset which is subject-matter of transfer.". The situs of the capital asset, viz., the technical know-how in the form of a dossier, was therefore not in India in any form after the termination of the licence granted to Pfizer India.

(iii) Consequently, the receipt (viz., the consideration of US$ 5 million aforesaid) is not chargeable to tax, either under Section 5(2)(ii) or under Section 9(1)(i) of the (Indian) Income-tax Act, 1961.




Advance Ruling
6. Consequent to its determinations aforesaid, the Authority's
Advance Ruling was as follows :

"Having regard to the provisions of the Income-tax Act, receipt by the applicant from the transfer of know-how and technical information in the form of a dossier under the sale and purchase of Technology agreement dated November 30, 2002 would not be chargeable to tax in India."

{ Reported in  [2004] 141 Taxman 642 (AAR - New Delhi)  }

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

Taxation of IT-Enabled Business Process Outsourcing Units in India

By  Circular No 1/2004 dated January 2, 2004,  India's Central Board of Direct Taxes ("CBDT") had indicated its approach to the taxation of Business Process Outsourcing ("BPO") Units in India. Broadly speaking, the approach was as follows :
In a case in which a BPO Unit constituting a Permanent Establishment ("PE") of a non-resident carried on in India only "incidental activities", e.g., conclusion of contracts or procurement of orders which enabled the core activities of the non-resident principal to be carried on outside India, the profit attributable to such incidental activities could be considered to have been embedded in the income of the PE (ordinarily and otherwise) taxable in India and no income attributable to such incidental activities was to be considered as having separately accrued or arisen in India to, or as being deemed to have accrued or arisen in India to, such non-resident principal.

On the other hand, if a BPO Unit carried on in India "core revenue generating business activities" of the non-resident principal (such as rendering the services of a travel agent or a software developer, or of software maintenance, or of investment consultancy or of debt collection), then -
  1. a considerable portion of the profits derived by the non-resident principal would have been attributable to the activities carried on by the BPO  and

  2. if the BPO Unit was a PE of the non-resident principal, such attributed profits would have been taxable in India in accordance with the provisions of the relevant tax treaty.






The CBDT has since reviewed its above Circular and has, by its  Circular No 5/2004 dated September 28, 2004 , titled "Taxation of IT enabled Business Process Outsourcing Units in India" [the "IT enabled" in the title being noteworthy], restated its position to be as follows :


If the BPO Unit neither has any "business connection" [Section 9(1)(i) of the (Indian) Income-tax Act, 1961] with its non-resident principal nor is such BPO Unit a PE of its non-resident principal, the non-resident principal would "not be liable under the Income Tax Act, 1961".

If the BPO Unit is a PE of its non-resident principal, the profits of such non-resident principal attributable to its PE shall be computed by determining the price of the services rendered by the PE to such non-resident principal or vice versa on the basis of he "arm's length principle". Further, the "arm's length price" (emphasis supplied) would -

  1. have the meaning assigned to it in Section 92-F(ii) of the (Indian) Income-tax Act, 1961 and

  2. be determined in accordance with th provisions of Sections 92 to 92-F of that enactment.

Consequent to the issue of   Circular No 5/2004 dated September 28, 2004, the CBDT has withdrawn  Circular No 1/2004 dated January 2, 2004  "with immediate effect" (emphasis supplied). Does this mean that for the period January 2, 2004 to September 27, 2004,  Circular No 1/2004 dated January 2, 2004 would continue to apply, inspite of the CBDT's manifest disavowal of its provisions ?

The links to the above Circulars are as follows :-


Circular No 1/2004 dated January 2, 2004

Circular No 5/2004 dated September 28, 2004

Monday, September 20, 2004

Report of the Task Force on Implementation of the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, 2003

The persistent imbalance in India's fisc had persuaded its Parliament to enact the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, 2003 ("FRBM Act"). For implementing the provisions of the FRBM Act, Mr Jaswant Singh (the then Union Minister for Finance) had, on 18th February, 2004, constituted a Task Force comprising the following individuals :


1Dr Vijay KelkarChairman
2Mr D C Gupta, Finance SecretaryMember
3Mrs Vineeta Rai, Revenue SecretaryMember
4Mr N S Sisodia, Secretary (FS)Member
5Mr D Swarup, OSD (Expenditure)Member
6Dr Ashok Lahiri, CEAMember
7Mr M Prasad, Joint SecretaryConvenor



The Task Force has, on 16th July, 2004, submitted to Government its Report.

The Full Text of the Report can be accessed at :

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